Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Channel 101

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Film festival featuring shorts in the format of a TV pilot
Television channel
Channel 101
CountryUnited States (shows can be submitted from anywhere)
HeadquartersThe Downtown Independent (formerly Cinespace)
Programming
Picture format16:9
History
Launched2002
Former namesSuper Midnight Movie Show
Links
Websitechannel101.org

Channel 101 is a non-profit[1] monthly short film festival inLos Angeles, which has a sister festival inNew York City,Channel 101 NY. Channel 101 is a creation ofDan Harmon andRob Schrab in which participants submit a short film in the format of apilot under five minutes in length. The event is structured such that a panel of previously successful submitters choose what pilots are shown, and a live audience atThe Downtown Independent decides which pilots continue as a series for the next screening in much the same way TV programs are rated and managed. According to the Channel 101 website, "Channel 101 is a chance to sit in the worn-out chair of the fat network exec, drunk on the blood of lowly artists whose right to exist is given in exchange for their ability to nourish... You run the network. You pick the programming."[2]

Concept

[edit]

Roughly once a month, a screening for Channel 101 occurs at the Downtown Independent theater inLos Angeles, with usually ten shorts being screened. At the screening, the audience votes on which pilots they would like to see return. The top five shows are entered into the "prime time" slots on the Channel 101 website, and get to make a follow-up episode for the next screening. This process continues with new "episodes" being shown at each screening until one fails to make the top five, at which point the series is cancelled. Some successful shows can choose to be cancelled voluntarily by running over five minutes, disqualifying the show from continuing and leaving one last un-voted episode. Shows that fail to make the prime time spot are known as "failed pilots". An added benefit of having a prime time series is that prime time directors are part of the panel that decides which five new pilots will be shown alongside the five established shows from the previous screening. Shows that fail to make the screenings are known as "rejected pilots". Each calendar year of the festival is referred to as a "season", comprising 10 screenings, due to there being no December screening, plus month break "to allow the creators to rest" between spring/summer and the November screening, which is the yearly awards show, called the Incredibly Prestigious Achievement Award or "Channy", so named as a parody ofEmmy. The Channy Awards have been held 8 times as of 2012.

Other rules have been tried out, most notably the "Chauncey" (named after director Chris Chauncey, the first to invoke the rule), wherein a director could overrule the voting panel and force their pilot to be screened, but the audience had the option of stopping the film at any time. Introduced in October 2003, it was done away with in November 2005 due to the popularity of the festival making it difficult for the honor system to be viable.[3] Only one Chauncey made prime time (Dick Richards: Private Dick).

The name "Channel 101" is not meant to suggest aneducational course; rather, it derives from theHollywood convention for numbering a TV show's seasons and episodes. Since it is a festival for pilots, all of the screenings start off as episode "101" of their series.

History

[edit]

The idea for Channel 101 began in 2001, when Schrab invited several friends over for a screening ofJaws: The Revenge, but challenged them to bring a short film predicting what would happen in the film.[2] In 2002, three more short film challenges were issued, but the group of viewers outgrew Schrab's living room. Instead, the screening was moved to the backroom of an LA nightclub. Additionally, friends of friends of the filmmakers were beginning to ask what this "festival" was called and how they could enter. In 2003, Schrab and Harmon named their creation the Super Midnight Movie Show and decided on a monthly screening and a five-minute format. However, they realized that once the show started growing, it would only be a matter of time before a large number of low-quality submissions were entered, and filmmakers would need to be turned away for time constraints. They decided to adopt a TV network-like ratings model where the audience votes on which films they like, and popular filmmakers were allowed to screen more films accordingly. In 2004, a pilot for a reality show about Channel 101 and its filmmakers was shopped toFX Networks, but was eventually passed on.[4] Asketch comedy show based on the format of Channel 101 and executive-produced by Harmon and Schrab aired onVH1.[5] The show was calledAcceptable.TV and it began airing March 23, 2007.

The success of Channel 101 led to a sister film festival in New York City,Channel 101 NY.

Notable shows

[edit]
  • Yacht Rock—Amockumentary series from J. D. Ryznar, Hunter D. Stair, and Lane Farnham, detailing fictional accounts of the lives of real "smooth music" musicians, particularlyKenny Loggins andMichael McDonald.Yacht Rock lasted 10 episodes as a primetime show from 2005 to 2006, but was sufficiently popular that the creators made two more episodes in 2008 and 2010.[6]
  • Chad Vader: Day Shift Manager—A video series that was created for Channel 101, but cancelled after two episodes. The creators,Matt Sloan andAaron Yonda, went on to continue the series, and it became a series onYouTube where it was "featured" multiple times.
  • Everything—Ananthology show curated by Jason Whetzell and Danny Jelinek, featuring very short films by a variety of artists, introduced (briefly) by host Sophie Kipner.Everything is the longest-running prime time show on Channel 101, with 19 episodes between August 2009 and August 2011.[7] The shortGoing to the Store picked up attention fromBuzzFeed andThe Huffington Post.
  • The Parent Project—A show where parents created the stories for each episode by talking to their children over the phone. The first 10 episodes had creator and director Brett Weiner talking to his own mother and father. She quit on episode 10, and the show continued with guest subjects calling their families.The Parent Project was the third longest-running prime time show on Channel 101, with 15 episodes between October 2010 and May 2012.
  • Classroom—A parody ofafter school specials by Tyler Spiers. The third longest-running prime time show, with five first-place episodes during its run of 13 between 2006 and 2007.[8]
  • ChooseYourOwnSelectAVision.TV—A parody ofChannel 101 andAcceptable.TV fromDan Harmon and JD Ryznar, in which Internet viewers voted for one of three 30-second pilots to return in the next episode. It was voted back for a fifth month, but was cancelled when Harmon and Ryznar failed to complete the fifth episode on time. The most popular 30-second show was "Doctor Asshole", a parody ofDoctor Who.[9]
  • Sex Teenagers—A comedy fromTom Kauffman and David Seger about a group of clueless teenagers. Episode 7 was shot and screened live in real time at the Channel 101 screening on October 29, 2011.[10]
  • Time BeltChris Tallman's homage toQuantum Leap, featuring guest starsPaget Brewster andJack Black – the latter in a crossover withComputerman. It was the last of the original prime time shows to be cancelled, lasting eight episodes from 2003 to 2004.[11]
  • Computerman—StarringJack Black as a cross-breed of a man'sDNA and his home computer.
  • House of Cosbys—An animated series byJustin Roiland about a fan and his collection ofBill Cosby clones.House of Cosbys was the first Channel 101 show to be ranked number one at three screenings in a row.[12] It was cancelled and removed from the Channel 101 site after four episodes following acease and desist letter from Cosby's lawyers,[12][1] though a fifth episode was produced.[13]
  • Laser Fart—A superhero parody initially conceived as a joke submission by Dan Harmon, who also starred in the title role,Laser Fart became a surprise hit, lasting ten episodes in prime time from 2004 to 2005. Jack Black guest-starred in two episodes.[14]
  • Sockbaby—StarringJohn Soares and zero-budget martial arts fromDoug TenNapel, the creator ofEarthworm Jim.
  • Planet Unicorn—Fictional stories revolve around three talking unicorns – Feathers, Cadillac, and Tom Cruise – who were created by an 8-year-old gay boy named Shannon.
  • The 'Bu— A long-running prime-time teen soap opera in the style ofThe OC (11 episodes); also known for being filmed with new cast and crew for the last three episodes. The show was created by and starredThe Lonely Island alongsideSarah Chalke.
  • Gigabots—APower Rangers parody made by the Duncan Brothers and Brenan Campbell.
  • Brently and Mrs. Gould—StarringBrently Heilbron and his 85-year-old sidekick, Mrs. Gould (played by Jean Farber).
  • Call Me Cobra—StarringDrew Carey, a show about a man who is mistaken for a professional killer, but takes the job for the money.
  • Channel 101: The Musical—A fully orchestrated Broadway-style musical featuringSarah Silverman andHappy Days'Donny Most.
  • Most Extraordinary Space Investigations—Starring Dan Harmon, Sevan Najarian, Justin Roiland, and Sarah Silverman. It is noted for intentional mistakes, and purposely performing notable errors.
  • Twigger's Holiday—StarringRob Schrab, a colorful musical about a kid growing up.
  • Shitbuster—Holds the record for most downloaded failed pilot. A revived short series starringChris Romano as the original Shitbuster ran for 3 episodes.
  • The Jogger—Cancelled pilot about a jogger solving problems. It garnered praise for the choreography and was later featured inEntertainment Weekly. The show later had its rights picked up by a production company.[15]
  • The Wright Stuff—StarringEthan Phillips as PresidentTheodore Roosevelt and created by Ford Austin and Scott Ingalls. It became the highest budgeted Channel 101 series at $5,000 per episode.
  • I Love Vaginas—The creators, at age 14, were the youngest to make it to the Channel 101 screening.
  • The Serious Businessman—This show's challenge to its rejection by the voting panel created the "Chauncey" system.
  • Cautionary Tales of Swords—Trip Fisk (Michael Ashe) tries warning the world of the dangers of sword ownership, and later, decides to fight the problem himself.
  • Return to Supermans—A send-up of Turkish versions of American cinema (such asTurkish Star Wars). It was created by Aaron Moles and was also featured onG4'sAttack of the Show!.
  • Ultraforce—A three-episodescience fiction action spectacular created byJeremy Carter andMatt Gourley ofSuperego. It featuredDerek Mears,Jeff Davis, and Chris Tallman.
  • IKEA Heights—Amelodrama shot entirely in theBurbank, CaliforniaIKEA store, unbeknownst to the staff. It was featured in theLA Times[16]
  • Business—Was cancelled and came back as an animated series.
  • Skateboard Cop—The onlyspin-off show to ever win Best Show. It ran for 10 episodes and won Best Show in 2014.
  • Kill The Baby—Mayhem ensues when a man makes the decision to kill his infant child.
  • The Real Animated Adventures of Doc and Mharti—A risquéBack to the Future parody made in response to Justin Roiland's forced cancellation of his previous showHouse of Cosbys. It ended up later serving as the basis for Harmon and Roiland's popular animated seriesRick and Morty.[17]
  • Pop-It—Adark comedy driven by special effects,body horror, and heavy atmosphere.
  • Somewhere in Highland Park—Two friends navigate surreal situations in theirHighland Park neighborhood.
  • Channel 101—A satire of the Channel 101 institution in the context of the#MeToo movement that takes particular aim at the white male-dominated world of comedy and film. It features founder Dan Harmon's first performance on a 101 series in almost ten years when he guest starred in episode 3.[18]
  • Daryl—A dark comedy parody ofDexter starring Dan Harmon as the title character, a therapist who prevents people from becoming serial killers by raping them as babies.[19] The sketch resurfacing in late July 2018 led to Harmon deleting hisTwitter account.[20]

Notable personalities

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abHarmon, Dan (2006-06-13)."My Statement to the Wall Street Journal re: House of Cosbys".channel101.com. Archived fromthe original on 2006-06-13. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  2. ^ab"The History of Channel 101".channel101.com.Archived from the original on 2021-06-06. Retrieved2022-03-03.
  3. ^Harmon, Dan (2005-11-01)."Official Chauncey Thread for October 2005".channel101.com. p. 9. Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved2006-06-03.Exactly. No more chauncey. We're too big, too public, now. We can no longer expect applicants to be bound by any kind of honor. Every shitty director just automatically calls chauncey because they can because it's better to have your stuff on screen than not.
  4. ^Harmon, Dan (2004-12-01)."I just made my first rejected Channel 101 pilot".channel101.com. Archived fromthe original on 2005-02-13. Retrieved2006-06-03.
  5. ^Wilkensen, Wes (2006-06-03)."Real TV Takes Second Look at Channel 101".channel101.com. Archived fromthe original on 2006-06-15. Retrieved2006-06-03.
  6. ^"Yacht Rock".Channel 101. 2010-04-24. Archived fromthe original on 2012-01-01. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  7. ^"Everything".Channel 101. 2011-08-27. Archived fromthe original on 2011-10-31. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  8. ^"Classroom".Channel 101. 2007-04-29. Archived fromthe original on 2011-05-27. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  9. ^"ChooseYourOwnSelectAVision.TV".Channel 101. 2007-08-26. Archived fromthe original on 2011-11-04. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  10. ^"Sex Teenagers".Channel 101. 2011-10-29. Archived fromthe original on 2011-11-05. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  11. ^"Time Belt".Channel 101. Archived fromthe original on 2011-10-07. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  12. ^abMiller, Lia (2006-03-06)."Cosby's Lawyers See No Flattery in an Imitation".New York Times. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  13. ^"House Of Cosbys".Channel 101. 2005-06-26. Archived fromthe original on 2011-11-07. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  14. ^"Laser Fart".Channel 101. Retrieved2011-11-30.
  15. ^"Channel 101: NY".
  16. ^"Virality erupts at IKEA in Burbank".Los Angeles Times. 8 September 2009.
  17. ^"Mega Dan Harmon interview, part 3: 'Rick and Morty'" by Alan Sepinwall.HitFix.
  18. ^"Channel 101 - Channel 101 - Episode 3".Channel 101. Retrieved12 June 2018.
  19. ^Thornton, Jerry (July 23, 2018)."Rick and Morty's' Dan Harmon is Under Fire for an Old 'Dexter' Parody About a Baby Rapist".Barstool Sports. RetrievedAugust 24, 2018.
  20. ^Desta, Yohana (July 24, 2018)."Dan Harmon Apologizes for Offensive Video, Deletes His Twitter Account".Vanity Fair. RetrievedAugust 21, 2018.

External links

[edit]
TV series created
Films written
Related
TV series created
Video games
Characters
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Channel_101&oldid=1247220632"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp